Trust in cervical screening and attributions of blame for interval cancers following a national controversy

Author:

Poluektova Olga12ORCID,Robertson Deirdre A.13,Papadopoulos Alexandros1,Lunn Peter D.14

Affiliation:

1. Behavioural Research Unit The Economic and Social Research Institute (ESRI) Dublin Ireland

2. School of Social Sciences and Philosophy Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland

3. School of Psychology Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland

4. Department of Economics Trinity College Dublin Dublin Ireland

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesThis study investigated levels of trust and attributions of blame in connection with a cervical screening programme following a controversy related to the programme's audit, incorporating an experimental test of the effectiveness of new information materials.DesignWe compared responses in Ireland (N = 872) to equivalent responses in Scotland (N = 400). Participants in Ireland were randomly assigned to either a treatment group that received the information materials or a control group that did not. Participants then responded to questions about their trust in cervical screening and to whom they would attribute blame in a range of scenarios describing women diagnosed with cervical cancer between screening rounds.ResultsResults showed that the control group in Ireland had lower trust and attributed higher blame towards screening services than participants in Scotland. However, exposure to information materials in the treatment group improved trust and reduced blame.ConclusionsThe findings suggest that public controversies influence perceptions of screening programmes and underscore the importance of transparent, choice‐based communication in mitigating these effects. The findings have valuable implications for screening services worldwide as all screening programmes will have associated false negative and false positive results.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference16 articles.

1. Central Statistics Office. (2021).Satisfaction with Public Services.https://www.cso.ie/en/releasesandpublications/fp/fp‐trus/trustsurveydecember2021/satisfactionwithpublicservices/

2. Interval cancer audit and disclosure in cervical screening programmes: An international survey

3. To Blame is Human: A Quantitative Systematic Review of the Relationship Between Outcome Severity of Large‐Scale Crises and Attributions of Blame

4. Health Service Executive (HSE). (2022).Final Scally Progress Review. HSE.https://www.hse.ie/eng/services/news/media/pressrel/final‐scally‐progress‐review.html

5. International Agency for Research on Cancer. (2023).Best practices in cervical screening programmes: Audit of cancers legal and ethical frameworks communication and workforce competencies.

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